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Hollow Protestations: A Meditation on Actors, People, and the Theater of Modern Outrage

I have always been haunted by a line from Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead , spoken by the Player with that peculiar blend of smugness and resignation: “We’re actors — we’re the opposite of people.” It’s a line that, once heard, refuses to leave you alone. It lingers like a riddle, or perhaps like a diagnosis. What does it mean to be the opposite of a person? And why does that phrase feel more relevant now than ever? People, after all, are supposed to be real. Authentic. Burdened by the mundane obligations that tether us to the earth: children, work, bills, the slow erosion of idealism under the weight of daily life. People have to pick up groceries, negotiate with toddlers, and remember to pay the water bill. People are grounded. Actors — the kind I’m talking about — are not. And I don’t mean Hollywood actors, though they too have their own peculiar detachment from the gravitational pull of reality. No, the actors I mean are the ones who populate our streets, our feeds, our pu...

What the Books Say About Gene Editing: A Short Guide to the Literature

The question of whether humanity should redesign itself genetically has fascinated scientists, philosophers, and writers for decades. Long before the rise of CRISPR, several authors explored the implications of human genetic engineering for society, ethics, and the future of our species. Below is a brief overview of some of the most influential works in this discussion. 1. Remaking Eden — Lee M. Silver ( 1997) One of the earliest and most provocative books on the topic is Remaking Eden . Written before the discovery of modern gene- editing tools, it explored the consequences of combining reproductive technologies with genetic engineering. Silver introduced the concept of “ reprogenetics” , meaning the combination of reproductive technologies ( such as IVF) with genetic selection or modification to allow parents to choose their children's genetic traits. The book makes several key arguments: 1. Genetic choice will likely become normal. Silver argues that once technology al...

Should Humanity Improve Itself? The Case For and Against Genetic Self-Enhancement

Human beings have always tried to improve their condition. From education and medicine to nutrition and technology, we constantly search for ways to overcome biological limitations. Today, however, a new possibility is emerging: the ability to directly modify human biology through technologies such as CRISPR gene editing and synthetic biology . These tools may eventually allow humans not only to treat disease but to alter the genetic traits of future generations. The prospect raises one of the most profound questions humanity has ever faced: Should we deliberately improve the human species? The Case for Human Genetic Enhancement 1. Eliminating Genetic Disease The strongest argument in favor of genetic intervention is medical. Thousands of diseases are caused by single gene mutations, including conditions like Cystic Fibrosis , Huntington’s Disease , and Sickle Cell Disease . If gene editing technologies become safe and reliable, they could remove these mutations from the human ge...

Confession of an IQ Hacker, Part II

I never expected the first confession to become anything more than a curiosity, and still, do not ; an odd little artifact of a life spent tinkering with systems that were never meant to be airtight. Yet here I am again, blathering , and more amused but perhaps more honest than before. If the first confession was about the why of my IQ-hacking escapades, this one is about the how —the practical, analog, pre-internet machinery that made the whole enterprise possible. And maybe, in the process, it’s also about the strange psychology of someone who never cared about the number attached to his name, but cared deeply about the machinery behind the number. If Part I was the blueprint, Part II is the field manual. Origins of a Method Long before large language models, before search engines, before the internet became the collective prosthetic memory of humanity, there were libraries. And before libraries, there were people like me—kids who took apart radios, televisions, clocks, and occasion...

Is Wisdom Boring II?

(A Longer, More Tiresome, Possibly Wiser Meditation than its predecessor; Is Wisdom Boring?) I keep circling this question like a dog sniffing at something suspicious on the sidewalk: Is wisdom boring? I’m not asking it rhetorically. I’m not trying to be clever. I’m genuinely trying to figure out whether the thing I’ve spent so much of my life pursuing — good sense, clarity, perspective, whatever you want to call it — is, in the end, just a more respectable form of boredom. A kind of spiritual “opaque couché.” A life lived in grayscale rather than neon. Let me start with a simple definition. For the purposes of this essay, wisdom is “good sense.” Not mystical enlightenment, not divine revelation, not some guru’s cryptic pronouncements about the nature of the cosmos. Just good sense. The kind of thing your grandmother might have told you while stirring soup. Don’t touch the stove. Don’t jump off the cliff. Don’t date someone who screams at waiters. Good sense. And yet, even this simple...